Anyone been on BA long haul recently? Headphone question

Anyone been on BA long haul recently? Headphone question

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Deep

Original Poster:

2,193 posts

249 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
Hi
I like to use my own noise cancelling headphones to watch films when flying. My Sony ones come with a two pronged adaptor (see pic) that usually allows you to plug straight into the aircraft outlet...I've certainly used it on many Emirates flights.
Earlier this year I took a Virgin flight and found that the adaptor wasn't suitable. I can't remember exactly but I think Virgin had three holes in their outlet.

Next month I'm taking a BA flight and I don't want to have the same issue.

Can anyone confirm whether the adaptor is suitable for BA outlet?

Thanks very much

davek_964

9,158 posts

181 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
I flew BA last year - I also have Sony with an adaptor like that.

It didn't fit - the plane I was on had two holes but the adaptor didn't fit them.

However, I discovered afterwards that apparently the two holes in the BA seats are for sound and power to their own headphones. So you don't need the adaptor - you just plug the single pin cable you have into one of the two holes (it will only fit one of them)

Deep

Original Poster:

2,193 posts

249 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
davek_964 said:
I flew BA last year - I also have Sony with an adaptor like that.

It didn't fit - the plane I was on had two holes but the adaptor didn't fit them.

However, I discovered afterwards that apparently the two holes in the BA seats are for sound and power to their own headphones. So you don't need the adaptor - you just plug the single pin cable you have into one of the two holes (it will only fit one of them)
Hey mate, that's really helpful, thank you!
I wonder if that was the case with the Virgin flight I was on as well....?

Thanks again!

durbster

10,631 posts

228 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
I flew with BA in 2022 and I can't say for certain but I think they had the double socket in the arm rest, and then a single aux port on the in-flight entertainment system that you could use instead.

I know I used my noise cancelling headphones and I didn't have an adapter but I can't quite remember if I used them when I was watching stuff, or the ones they gave us.

miniman

25,973 posts

268 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
787 economy last summer, 3.5mm jack plugged straight in to infotainment.

Deep

Original Poster:

2,193 posts

249 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
Thanks guys.
It must have been something similar on the Virgin flight as well but I just didn't figure it out. I was pretty drunk though and just gave up after a while biggrin

valiant

11,136 posts

166 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
miniman said:
787 economy last summer, 3.5mm jack plugged straight in to infotainment.
Yep.

We flew a newer version going out to the States that had its 3.5mm jack near the screen and flew back on one with the older infotainment which had a double jack in the armrest but plugging in on one of the two sockets was absolutely fine.

durbster

10,631 posts

228 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
Deep said:
Thanks guys.
It must have been something similar on the Virgin flight as well but I just didn't figure it out. I was pretty drunk though and just gave up after a while biggrin
Aha. So it might be that you were actually trying to plug your headphones into a bread roll hehe

Deep

Original Poster:

2,193 posts

249 months

Sunday 16th June
quotequote all
durbster said:
Aha. So it might be that you were actually trying to plug your headphones into a bread roll hehe
Considering I'd been drinking at the airport for three hours that's very possible lol

FIREBIRDC9

746 posts

143 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
BA A350 to vegas this April , World Traveller.

Standard headphone jack into the infotainment smile


Trustmeimadoctor

13,197 posts

161 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
Yup 2 prong is either that adapter if holes are same size you can just plug in to one hole but you will likely get mono sound

If the 2 holes are different sizes then the smaller is for powering the supplied NC headphones

Same with 3 pin the smaller 3rd is power

May I suggest using a Bluetooth transmitter though rather than connecting your headphones via the cable

surveyor

18,059 posts

190 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
2 of the 3 holes are actually screws on Virgin Dreamliner at least (taken live at 38,000 feet)


Trustmeimadoctor

13,197 posts

161 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
surveyor said:
2 of the 3 holes are actually screws on Virgin Dreamliner at least (taken live at 38,000 feet)

This is a 3 pin

ecsrobin

17,734 posts

171 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
If your headphones are Bluetooth a popular solution is using an airfly pro, they also sell them at the airport.

https://amzn.eu/d/a2T0m7P

Trustmeimadoctor

13,197 posts

161 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
They cost more than they need to do

This is alot cheaper and works very well


https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09DP3PHTB

Deep

Original Poster:

2,193 posts

249 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
surveyor said:
2 of the 3 holes are actually screws on Virgin Dreamliner at least (taken live at 38,000 feet)

That's odd.
I was on a Virgin A350 and I'm sure it was three prongs. It was business class but I can't imagine that would make a difference. Perhaps there was another single prong outlet as well that I didn't spot.

Thanks

Trustmeimadoctor

13,197 posts

161 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
BC will usually be 3 prong as they supply NC headphones that require power

Deep

Original Poster:

2,193 posts

249 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
Trustmeimadoctor said:
They cost more than they need to do

This is alot cheaper and works very well


https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09DP3PHTB
Yes, £50 seems like a lot for a BT adaptor given that you can buy a half decent portable speaker with inbuilt BT for that kind of money.


Sciurus

747 posts

151 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
Deep said:
I wonder if that was the case with the Virgin flight I was on as well....?
It is. I'm an extremely regular traveller on Virgin and the standard 3.5mm connector will work - no need for an adaptor.

Deep

Original Poster:

2,193 posts

249 months

Monday 17th June
quotequote all
Trustmeimadoctor said:
BC will usually be 3 prong as they supply NC headphones that require power
What does BC stand for?

Thanks